We Americans are as varied as the next bunch, just better. — Hanover
we don't convict people for being pieces of shit — Hanover
White perps clearly do so with impunity and are Profiled, Arrested, Prosecuted & Convicted far less often than Black perps. Especially in the south, a legacy of jim crow, etc ... — 180 Proof
Is motivation not a factor in criminal law in the US? Malice aforethought and stuff? In the UK being a piece of shit is the difference between murder and manslaughter. — unenlightened
So if the article had stated "black person" it would be a racist thing? Or if he was described as a black, fat, stuttering, shy, ugly, young man, we are to investigate whether there is a possibility they just didn't like shy people? — Benkei
why the allegation by Baden he was "waving the gun in his face" isn't a quibble, but is a critical distinction. — Hanover
Whether or not they actually waved the gun or pointed it at him before he tried to grab it is not discernible from the video I've seen. — Baden
He came toward the threat that was not being waved at him. — Hanover
The question is whether he assaulted him with a weapon. Carrying a gun is not an assault, which is why the allegation by Baden he was "waving the gun in his face" isn't a quibble, but is a critical distinction. — Hanover
Threatening someone with a gun is brandishment. It's illegal, right? — frank
. But Hanover appears to think it's his own fault he's dead because the racist was just standing there threatening him with a gun without actually waving it in his face (though actually we don't know he didn't do — Baden
The perps lied in their statements to police about the killing. Attempted cover-up is circumstantial evidence of consciousness of guilt. I'm not attributing anything to the perps sans what is already reported about the circumstances of the killing and the context within which the local authorities initially failed and then were very slow to respond.↪180 Proof How would you characterize the motive without committing the very wrong were attributing to McMichaels? — frank
My outlook flips this script: racism asserts the "superhumanity" - superiority, thus supremacy - by a "race"-color-ethnic In-Group over the mere humanity of a "race"-color-ethnic Out-Group; in other words, idolatrous self-deification by demonizing - scapegoating - the other. "The wrong" is the banal inhumanity of ego-fantasy (i.e. rabid tribalism).The wrong of racism is that it fails to account for the humanity of a target group, but also their individuality.
Strawman. Of course not. But it's a fact that all nonwhites (in North America? and in Eurasia?) suffer daily from threats from and/or exercises of de facto systemic racism which apparently most whites fail to actively oppose while they benefit from its historical, or institutional, legacies as well as by, in many cases, being functionaries of its 'policing powers'. Do you dispute that?The racist assumes all blacks are lazy. Should we assume in return that all whites are racist?
outlook flips this script: racism asserts the "superhumanity" - thus supremacy - by a "race"-color-ethnic In-Group over the mere humanity of a "race"-color-ethnic Out-Group; in — 180 Proof
Of course not. But it's a fact that all nonwhites (in North America? and in Eurasia?) suffer daily from threats from and/or exercises of de facto systemic racism which apparently most whites fail to actively oppose while they benefit from its historical, or institutional, legacies as well as by, in many cases, being functionaries of its 'policing powers'. Do you dispute that? — 180 Proof
If Arbery could have avoided the altercation, do you believe he was required to, or do you believe he had the right to stand his ground? — Hanover
Do you believe If Arbery was not threatened by the gun, but just went to grab it because he was pissed off at Billy bad ass with his gun, do you think the shooter should still be prosecuted? — Hanover
Do you believe Arbery is guilty of trespassing even if he didn't steal anything and even if others entered that site without permission from time to time? — Hanover
Do you think hate is a protected right and should not add to or subtract from the seriousness of a crime? — Hanover
:shade: :up:I'm pro hate-crime legislation whereby it's not hate per se that's outlawed but its violent expression against minorities. That's an important distinction, which your question obscures. Racists can go hate themselves into pretzels for all I care. That is, I accept their right to stew in corners over perceived/imagined grievances should be protected. — Baden
:point:Do you dispute that?
— 180 Proof
I don't. — frank
Well, i believe it's being nonwhite, born raised living & dying, in a "prison" of White Privilege (i.e. structural inequalities policed by systemic, institutionalized anti-nonwhite discrimination) that reinforces and normalizes "bitterness".I believe bitterness is a prison, though.
No. I really don't.I think there's a way to escape it that has to do with a kind of spirituality. Do you know what i mean?
It appears from the video that Arbery rushed McMicheals before the rifle fired. Arbery was either really stupid or really desperate.
Either way, it doesnt look premeditated. Manslaughter? — frank
Assiming (and I will) he was there because he's an idiot racist motivated to make a citizen's arrest, he's not guilty of murder unless he had the intent to murder, absent a legal defense (I.e. self defense). — Hanover
There was no crime committed, therefore no citizen's arrest to be made. He was not there to make a citizen's arrest. He was there with the intent of killing that man. — Metaphysician Undercover
"How common?"My question is: how common is this in Georgia? In the US? In the world? — frank
:point: A badge. A gun. A "local" prosecutor ...What factors make it more likely to happen?
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